Gauge Information

River Description

Note: The combination of Steep banks and lots of deadfalls tend to clog
the creek with wood from time to time, so keep look out.

This is a very small creek. Tight slots, fast slides, waterfalls, undercuts. Highlight is
"The Boss".

Gradient per mile: 190, 170, 90, 90 ft/mi. The Boss and steepest gradient is in first half of
second mile.

Put-in: Turn West from Hwy 7 at the "Who Would Have Thought It Gift
Shop" North of Lurton. Take the left-hand fork (Newon County Road 7080) ~1.2 miles to the
6th 4WD road to the left. Park and carry or drive 0.75 mile (4WD only) to a cable/gate. An ATV
trail leads downhill just before the gate. Drag downhill about 0.5 miles to put-in (elevation
~1560).

Take-out: Reach the take out by taking the right fork (Newon County Road 7050)
at the gift shop down the hill to Hurricane Creek. At the bottom of the hill the road forks. The
left fork (7050) fords a creek. If creek is high (which is needed for the Boss to be at a good
level) park here and plan to carry boats out 0.5 mile after the run. Please park on the
side of the road and not on any private property. If crossable, drive 0.5 mile to gate
near remnents of a burned house. Turn right in front of gate and park near the creek. Alternate
is for a long paddle on Hurricane Creek at big
water to the Hwy 123 access on the Big Piney.

Description

The creek starts out fast and narrow dropping over several small slides and ledges. Approximately
0.25 miles there is a small ledge into a small pool. Now the tight and technical section starts.
Lots of pin possibilities here. This is where the "Toilet Bowl" and "Baby Boss
Slide" are encountered. These are followed shortly by "Face Slap Falls" and
"Sycamore Slot".

After several more extended fast continuous rapids there is another small ledge into a small
pool. The exit to the pool is usually cluttered/blocked with logs. Scout on the right bank. This
is the entrance to "THE BOSS". This is the combination of the entrance slots
"Performance Evaluation", the big slide "Broken Paddle" and the last ledge
"Half a Paddle". Pick your way around the wood or carry. Run down the main channel to
the left through a slot, over a ledge and down a narrow slide and hang a 90 degree right to the
big slide. Make sure you slide down the right half of the slide to avoid the nasty vertical pin
potential on the left side. The last ledge into a small pool can create a strong hydraulic. Drive
left against the wall for the best escape from the hole.

Very shortly (100-150 yds) the creek takes a sharp turn to the left and funnels down a 3-4 ft.
wide slot. This is "The Undercut!" A large house foundation sized slab rock at least
50% undercut. Run as far left as possible. (up on the wall is my preferred route) The next 0.3
miles to just above the confluence with Buck Branch is known as "Cheesegrater". A long
continuous shoal with several surf holes. At low water it feels like a your sliding down a
cheesegrater. (At least your boat will be lighter for the carry out!). Shortly below the end of
the slide the creek narrows and funnels through a nasty strainer formed by the root wad of live
tree, boof over or portage. The final 2 miles down Buck Branch have many class III drops and
several play spots.

Beware in this section for downed trees and two notable undercuts. The first one is on far river
right below a nice surf ledge/hole. The second is not far downstream and is nasty. This undercut
is a huge flat rock facing upstream like an open mouth. The main current flows directly into and
under the rock. Large eddies are above it on both sides and it is avoidable and noticeable, but
it will gobble up wayward paddlers. (In April 2004 an offline paddler ran into and under this
rock and disappeared in a creekboat. Luckily there weren't any snags and he flushed out the
side a couple seconds later.)

Check out some video from this creek in the Ozark Update section of LVM issue #13.